Your humble nature and deep respect for these places is a breath of fresh air in today's society. Remembering our past is how we work toward the future! Keep on trekking!
One of the signatures on a rock you showed - Jens Peter Hansen - was my grandfather. He was a young man tending the family sheep the winter of November 1867. When I was wandering in the desert and visited the site I immediately recognized his "handwriting" from family documents. I took my mother to the site who confirmed the situation. She was in her late 80's at the time. The desert is full of wonderful treasures that should be carefully preserved.
That is so cool! It gives me goosebumps thinking about your grandfather out there with his flock & you bringing his 80 year old daughter to that same spot!! Wow!!
@@TheTrekPlanner LOVE the side-by-side shots, you need to do another compilation for 250K SUBS really soon. How about all the failures.... there has got to be a few rainouts, and false starts up the wrong side of a big river or chasm, jumping out of your skin from a donkey braying....
You are a pleasant and careful explorer and host of the places and ideas. Nice to watch. No wacky noises, jumping around, or being silly. Just a great show. We feel we are with you on the trek. That's nice.
No surprise to me that you've reached 100k. One of the most intriguing channels on the tube right now in my opinion. My Dad used to explore the 4 corners in the just the way you are right now, and long before the internet. He told fantastic stories of finding full undiscovered villages with unbroken pots and grinding stones. Unfortunately, I was never able to explore any of it with him. Your channel proves to me that these places exist. As another Southern Utahn, I want to say great job, keep up the great vids and I'm looking forward to your next one!
I used to live in Utah and would go out in the desert (more up north near Eureka where that crazy lunatic threw those young people down the mineshaft.) Lots of stories about lost treasure all over...especially lost gold mormon coins that were stolen and the thieves went into the desert next to be seen again.
My mom has told me stories of her family when growing up going around the area and finding all sorts of ruins and pottery. They called it "Tooli Hopping". My grandpa had a large collection of intact pottery that vanished when he died. Different times, for sure.
Hi there Jeff. I am native and live among these ruins. Our ancestors passed down to us. Anaizie broke their pottery and they did not carry with them. Later they would make more pottery where they live. It was said from Pablo people we don't want dog's eating from our dish. Thats why pottery was broken before they left
We have a lot of similar ancient ruins built by the native "Romans" (haha) around where we live - it's fun seeing all the petroglyphs, pottery shards, etc. Some of them are right near busy roads, but fortunately not a lot of people know about them so they don't get destroyed. Thank you for keeping the locations secret. Looking forward to more videos, keep them coming!
You are truly blessed, as I'm sure you know! Speaking on behalf of all old geezers everywhere, who've always had more than a passing interest in things of an archeological nature, we appreciate these wonders you are cataloging for future generations. Through you narratives and camera work, I can see things that few ever see, and I'm appreciative of the technology (and gasoline) you've purchased to make these things possible. The best part is, you have a pleasing demeanor and are a natural at this. Keep up the good work and please be careful! You're in the ancient stomping ground of the Skinwalker! Glad you have a Sat phone.
I'm usually a shy person, but putting myself out there has been a challenge and blessing in many ways to me. I've really had to stretch myself. I have really enjoyed sharing these places with you and others!
Excellent channel; please ignore the idiots who have miserable lives and must feel relevant by spreading negative energy. Continue doing what you do; you’re great!
It's hard to believe that the buildings of the Ancient Pueblo have been there for THOUSANDS OF YEARS, and some of the stuff we build now barely lasts over several HUNDRED! Also, you are just so darn cute that you brighten my day every time I watch one of your great videos! I'm a 60-something, very happily married lady, so don't worry about me stalking you or anything 😉.
THANK YOU! Loved it. Did you know the Dineh (Navajo) used to dig holes all over the places where they might encounter "Anasazi", so they could jump into them and conceal themselves. The Anasazi's main economy was the slave trade. Chaco was built by slaves, and slaves cut and hauled the timbers. Each home/building at Chaco Canyon is built diff. I never noticed until it was pointed out by a Dineh Historian Wally Brown. He said the slaves built their own homes and in the style of their tribe, that's why they are different. The Dineh called Chaco "The House or place of crying" b/c wails and cries were always heard coming from the place. They were into human sacrifice. Worshipped the darkness, and mocked the gods. They became addicted to gambling, which was brought to them by a man from the south. Prob. an Aztec or Toltec. They even gambled their wives and children away. Then they came under mind control from the beings that come thru the portals. The spiral represents the portal, and you see the beings connected to this portal. They can be in human form, or chimera's. They ate each other. Book about it "Man Corn" Those who could fled, the slaves revolted and fled. Some never seen again, others joined other tribes or joined the Dineh. (am I repeating myself lol. I've typed this elsewhere to someone) This info. comes to me from a 3rd generation medicine man and storyteller for the Dineh Navajo. A generation for them is 102 yrs. He says whatever you are told by the Parks Dept. about Chaco is not true. They will not allow the truth to be told. It's too woo woo for them. However, Dr. Don Mose Jr. the 3rd generation storyteller who gave this info. said their creation story mirrors Genesis as well. (it does, it starts off with 4 rivers that flow in opposite directions, but only two are in their oral history. Same as in the Bible. Tigris, Euphrates always talked about. Gishon and Pison sp? just mentioned once. He is on FILM saying this stuff. Which, is indeed a once in a lifetime thing. After The Hopi were betrayed and a ceremony not to be seen by outsiders was filmed and shown to outsiders...no more white man and his camera. Even Dr. Mose said, as he erased the sand after he told the stories said they stay here. Nothing leaves the hogan. You memorize the stories. He was rather indifferent to the camera. He just sat down and started chanting out all this oral history about The Anasazi. They had to kill the lights, pre checks, everything b/c once Don started, he does not stop. So they just turned the camera on and rolled with it.
A really neat idea would be to speak with the local tribes' elders and ask them about some of these finds as far as what they know about them because I bet there is a great deal of knowledge they have that would be so interesting to learn and to share with us.
Absolutely LOVE your channel! Calming yet adventurous. I’ve always been fascinated with ancient dwellings especially Native American sites so a big THANK YOU for all that you do. Congratulations!
Well deserved! One of my favorite channels. Great hikes and discoveries with gorgeous and beautiful scenic views. And you’re so respectful of the sites. Love! 💗
You deserve it!!! In my opinion you are on par with “Time Team”and “Indiana Jones”. You will likely inspire many people to care for our past in the correct way. You will also inspire others to just… go outside!! You are doing something really important here, and your success is the proof.
How have I never found your site til now? So happy. I'm sadly too old to go trekking to the really adventurous places, but my husband and I love taking trips from California to the desert southwest and visiting petroglyph sites as well as ancient dwellings of early indigenes. That region holds a fascination for me; don't know why, but it's an awesome experience. A favorite memory is a trip that included a drive through Sunset Crater, where we walked up to and around dozens of ruins, finding pottery shards, handprints in the adobe mud holding stones together in the ruins on the walls of Walnut Canyon. I would love to be young now, with a tool like Google Earth to help us explore. I'll explore vicariously through you, now I've found you. Thank you so much for sharing, yet taking care with protecting these very special sites. I do hope you find an archeologist with whom you can share the locations so perhaps at some point they can be studied more. Who knows what new facts might be learned!
The structure that is about 12 minutes in is a geologic structure. Myron Cook in his video "Investigate Mysterious Features with a Geologist" explains how it is formed. I just came across your videos and I am really enjoying them. I am so happy to see how respectful you are of the sites and I appreciate that you do not reveal where they are. As a rockhound I have seen first hand the destruction of an area when it becomes public. Looking forward to new adventures through your videos. I wish you continued success and safe travels!
For the amount of research you put into these videos and the time it takes to do so, specially with your family? Great videography! Glad your video hit my algorithm! Thank you!
The area you've explored with the footage you've never showed before, with the 3 figured petroglyphs, I got to visit that same sight about 15 years ago, and it started my fascination of ancient sites and such! So fun to see someone else sharing that same place and seeing what I saw so long ago!
Thank you for your work. As an indigenous descendant of the southwest who doesn’t live there I appreciate being able to see the places my ancestors built and that someone who isn’t of the lineage who built them appreciates them just as much as I do. I love you man you’re the best. Please keep doing what you do. It makes me so proud of who I am and anyone who dogs you is racist or is jealous of the legacy some people have on this continent. Thank you 🙏
Jeff, I'm glad to have found your channel, and become one of the 100K subscribers! I'm sure I'm not alone in telling you that you have a personality and presentation style that makes me feel like I'm enjoying your company in the videos, not just enjoying the places you take us. Too many youtube channels are full of conceit. You come across as genuine, and that's refreshing! Your videos are particularly compelling to me because I spend time on Google Earth as well, while I'm planning any hike. So you're playing a familiar game, and you're clearly having fun with it too! A couple of your videos have provided enough clues to inspire me to pull up Google Earth and go hunting for the site you visited. So far I've only found one, and only because I was familiar with Cedar Mesa/Bears Ears. It's one of my favorite playgrounds! The history is fascinating, whether it's "ancient" or not. If we were in Europe or Asia or Africa and we found stone age sites, there would be no question that the sites are "ancient." But in the Americas, stone age culture lasted right up until Cortez arrived, and much longer than that in areas the Spanish never settled. So stone age sites in the Americas are much younger than they might be in other parts of the world, but no less fascinating. It's funny that you mentioned the age of the Egyptian pyramids as a comparison to the Ancestral Puebloans. The two have something in common that keeps my attention: the egyptian hieroglyphs were a puzzle to historians for centuries: a written language, much like the petroglyphs and pictographs on Utah, but one that we haven't yet deciphered. Maybe someday we'll find an American "Rosetta Stone" to help us clear up their meaning!
I really appreciate your comment!! I have heard that some of the meanings to some petroglyphs are still known today by some Native American groups, but that they are sacred and they do not want to share them. I can't remember if I heard this from a video somewhere or a lecture I took part in at the University of Utah, but it just goes to show that petroglyphs (and ruins) are special places
Really enjoy the posts of your adventures. Thank you VERY MUCH for your constant reminders to be respectful of the places, and the things (think pottery shards), that you find. Keep up the great work, wish I could be there exploring with you!
New subscriber here. Love your channel. I grew up on the Navajo Reservation near Canyon De Chelly. So I grew up exploring the canyon and ruins. It has always fascinated me. Love how you respect everything you see and also not taking bits of pottery. (Bad luck to that that). Keep up the amazing work.
Thank you so much. I'm jealous you have gotten to explore Canyon De Chelly. It's on my list. I know it's an amazing place and can't wait to visit. Thank you for your comment
I like that you are exploring without being intrusive or digging. Your taking a peak and not making out you know what you’re looking at so it feels like we explore with you. Thanks
I am now too "ancient" at 85 to do what you already do so well, but you have inspired me to join the Archaeological Conservancy as a volunteer, so may be I can get back out in the field some way.
You deserve the 100K followers (and more). You obviously put a great deal of effort into your research and excursions. I look forward to your future videos!
I'm glad you're getting so much subs! You deserve it for all the hard work you do to create quality content. You have one of the best channels on TH-cam. I hope you get over 1 million subs before it's said and done.
You are an awesome trekker and I am definitely hooked on your videos! Stay safe and keep exploring. We will keep watching! And thank you for being so respectful and fun!
As a fellow explorer at heart, I Love your videos! Finding unique things on Google Maps and then Going Out to Find them! Sooo Cool! And it’s refreshing to see your respect for these awesome ancient sites! Keep up the good work! Congrats on reaching 100K!!
Good morning Mr. Trek, I love how u respect each & everything. I love your work & respect the way U respect. Thank you Trek for everything. From a happy subscriber 🌞
It is actually because of YOU that this was made possible. Well done. I admire you. Slow the edits down a bit for us oldies eh? haha We get to live vicariously through you and you are an absolute delight. Thank you for sharing this world with us.
Thankfully for those of us who hike there, the sandstones of southern Utah and the four corners provide fantastic traction, and they help make all of us more sure-footed, so long as the rocks are not loose. There's a recreation area near Moab Utah that's called "Slickrock." While the name makes it sound dangerous, its a bit of an inside joke: the rock surfaces at Slickrock are some of the grippiest anywhere. making it possible to hike or to ride bikes and motorcycles on steep inclines without losing grip. It's a weird feeling at first, moving across a slope that makes you think you might slide down, yet your boots and tires grip like the slope was almost flat.
I did a google search for one of the carved names that appeared in the video. John Harvey Averett was born on 8 March 1854, in Salt Lake City. He died on 5 May 1917, in Logandale, Nevada at the age of 63, and was buried in Pioneer Hill Cemetery, Overton, Nevada. I even found pictures of him. Fun!
Love your channel!!! Thank you for the respect you show for the Earth and ancient historical places you visit. I am half Lakota and just love seeing all hour finds! ❤
I appreciate your dedication, the self reflection and the historical respect you show concerning your treks. I often want to know more about the builders of these ruins. Thanks!
i'm so glad to have found your channel and pleasantly surprised by how quickly its grown in subscribers. i grew up in a small town in arizona and spent my childhood exploring the desert. every video takes me back to that feeling of wonder. so cool. 🙂
Kia Ora Jeff, and congratulations on reaching 100,000. I'm so glad that on the first day I saw the youtube shorts appear, yours was the first one I clicked on and you got a new subscriber. I think you were around 23 or 43 thousand at that point. Sorry I can't recall. Regardless, I'm so appreciative of your efforts and your long suffering Annie who always seems okay ♫♪ ♪♫ PS: The marker at 15:29 is not a headstone but a memorial for a county worker that was shot by a psychiatrically ill itinerant who was camping out in the desert. It was an absolutely senseless killing. There's plenty of info on line if you or anyone is interested.
Don’t think I told you before but I watch your videos more than once because I can’t find any new videos from you. I would rather watch yours than other peoples videos because you seem like you’re a real person, not a phony. Thanks for being you Jeff. Please keep it up.♥️
You do a good job of taking us places that some of us cannot travel to, so thank you for your efforts and your own interest in archeology, and for keeping the locations protected. Keep up the good work and thank you for sharing your videos with us! ❤
I'm not surprised your channel has 100K subs. It has a natural appeal to it and It's well done and well thought out. You're doing a good job, keep up the good work.
I love those old steps. It must have taken so much work to carve them out. The person who made them must have felt pride & a sense of acheivement & left a lasting creative work of practical use. Such works, when you think of the hands & backs & bodies that made them, have a real beauty of their own.
Keep Trekking, been exploring for over forty years. When I can’t get out your videos incite me to roam. There is always something undiscovered waiting. Best fun ever!
Thank you for documenting your adventures. I really enjoy your show. I dig your bike and the fact that you can find all of those petroglyphs and ruins out in the wild. You have brought these to our attention which is part of your American history. Looking forward to more . Bruce. Johannesburg South Africa
I love what you do. I used to be able to do things like that myself but my health doesn't permit me to any more. That's why I love and appreciate what you do very much. You makes me feel like I'm right there with you. Thank you very much. I hope you keep traveling and making great videos. Kathy
What I love about exploring and finding places like this is that you are standing in the exact same spot those people were standing in when they carved those petroglyphs or built those ruins. That is so exciting to me.
So the "anthromorphs" you showed at 12:37, those are depictions of Katsina, think of them like incredibly significant and powerful spirits. Theyre still celebrated by modern Puebloan people, as they were in ancient times. Those are some of the most detailed Katsina petroglyphs ive seen in the middle of nowhere- im not done with the video so i don't know yet if theres more ruins around them, but you should definitely look into them- based on the ones you see depicted, itll tell you a lot about the mindset and lives of the people who inhabited the region- some are associated with certain family clans, others bring water, good crops, successful battles- even a passing knowledge can help answer questions about a region/the people who lived there. I cant go too much into it, they arent my stories to tell, but that find is spectacular, and says so much about the people who were there!
I salute you for the steps you take to preserve these ruins. They are truely amazing. Nothing like them in Ohio, but we have the earthwork and mounds from times past. So many have been destroyed. Some of the structures look like they could be possibly ceremonial. Be interesting to hear what the archeologist say about them. Keep the videos coming I’ll never get a chance to see them but your taking some hike I know my old body couldn’t do. Stay safe!
I'd just like to say thank you for taking us all along on your adventures. Currently & temporarily, I am bed ridden, so I appreciate it all that much more. It's like a mini vacation for the brain... In this video, it looks like some miners just happen to spot "a bein" in an abandoned native dwelling of sorts. Miners would look for certain quartz deposits & other signs, which often led them to silver, copper or precious stones. Naturally they would dump their unwanted materials, and probably utilized some of the old structures to their advantage for camp or shade. The two mixtures of two totally different cultures is why their are carefully stacked stone, & obvious dump heeps, seemingly right next to one another
I live in urban London (UK)- you're so lucky to have this scenery to wander in, and unexplored spots to find. It's lovely to see this part of the USA. Keep it up!
My dad took us to every national park he could and hiked a lot.I didn’t appreciate it as a child but now, in my 60s I have time and want to get back into shape and go see things. Your videos are very nice and easy to watch and I’m hoping will get me up and exploring again. I like the information and history you share. Very useful. Thank you!
@@TheTrekPlanner Wow thank you so much for responding! I absolutely mean it, your content is second to none! I have a huge interest in Southwestern archaeology and the research and exploring you do and videos you make are fascinating and make me want to further explore the incredible ancient history and ruins in that stunning part of the country. Thanks for the outstanding content, keep up the great work!
And thank YOU for giving us a window to a fascinating world. While Chaco Canyon and the Anasazi may be prime examples of native American settlement in the Southwest, your finds clearly demonstrate the extent of the Pueblo influence. Take care, be safe!
I can’t tell u how much I enjoy your content & don’t know what I’d do w out them & your kind respectful narration so natural & congenial. ❤ I’d be more lost w out them & vise versa enjoy getting lost in them trying to guess where u are. And hey… it’s about time u married that girl omgawl! Patient woman! & adorable family.👍🌵🏜️🐿️😀
There are a few channels I subscribe to and since i've recently discovered yours, I can say, you've quickly have made my top 3. Technology, (ie. Google Earth, GPS, drones.), wasn't around when I was able to explore desert regions and I find it absolutely intriguing. Now, I sit and vicariously explore with adventurers like you, willing to share your travels, adventures and knowledge without sidetracking. Congrats on reaching that magic number, and good luck reaching the next one!
Oh my gosh! That orange pottery is amazing. I love the desert and used to go hiking and camping often in Southern Utah. I've been fortunate enough to also hike to some ruins around Lake Powell. Now that I can't hike anymore I enjoy the journey you are taking us on. I dont care what anyone says, 700 years in our history is ancient!!! Keep up the great work. Its also fun to see you others. I get a little nervous thinking about you out there by yourself. I'm glad you take the precautions you do!
Pay no attention to your detractors. They are few. You do an excellent job with your videos and I enjoy them very much. I respect the fact that you keep the sites somewhat secret and that you leave everything as you found it. Keep up the excellent work!
I've spent most of my 59 years surrounded by the red sandstone featured here. These places do exist. The fewer that know where something is, the fewer can despoil it. The more of these I see, the more I admire the people that built them.
Spent lot of time in SW in70s, no Google earth. Our discoveries were made by dirt bike and sheer accident but always amazed. Thanks a lot for these videos. Love them, keep it up.please
Recognized meaning of ancient is 1000 years or older. But this is quit subjective. 750 yrs is close enough. Thanks for thanking us along on your treks.
I love that you are showing artifacts that are Native American. We don’t know enough about their history. Not the correct history either. So it is so cool to see all these! And it is also sad to see them damaged and not cared for. Our history is important. I wish they were protected more.
Haven't commented before, but here I go. Been watching your videos for some time now and have really enjoyed them because I have also run across many old/ancient ruins in the four corners area and I'm always intrigued by them. I try to imagine myself living in that spot years ago and usually can't see how they did it. I think there must have been a lot more water in those areas than you see today. No matter the circumstances, I really admire what they had to do to survive. Keep up the good work. I'm looking forward to more.
Your humble nature and deep respect for these places is a breath of fresh air in today's society.
Remembering our past is how we work toward the future!
Keep on trekking!
One of the signatures on a rock you showed - Jens Peter Hansen - was my grandfather. He was a young man tending the family sheep the winter of November 1867. When I was wandering in the desert and visited the site I immediately recognized his "handwriting" from family documents. I took my mother to the site who confirmed the situation. She was in her late 80's at the time. The desert is full of wonderful treasures that should be carefully preserved.
Thank you for sharing! It's interesting to think he and I were standing in the same spot many years apart looking at the same rock surface
That is so cool! It gives me goosebumps thinking about your grandfather out there with his flock & you bringing his 80 year old daughter to that same spot!! Wow!!
@@TheTrekPlanner LOVE the side-by-side shots, you need to do another compilation for 250K SUBS really soon.
How about all the failures.... there has got to be a few rainouts, and false starts up the wrong side of a big river or chasm, jumping out of your skin from a donkey braying....
You are a pleasant and careful explorer and host of the places and ideas. Nice to watch. No wacky noises, jumping around, or being silly. Just a great show. We feel we are with you on the trek. That's nice.
We all like silly and wacky noises Karen! 😂
@@kateapple1, No, not all of us. Not me.
Well said ...
@@kateapple1 You spelt Katherine wrong...
"Spelt"? As in wheat?
Spelled.
Your kids are so lucky to have an adventurous dad like you getting them outside and appreciating this magical world.
No surprise to me that you've reached 100k. One of the most intriguing channels on the tube right now in my opinion. My Dad used to explore the 4 corners in the just the way you are right now, and long before the internet. He told fantastic stories of finding full undiscovered villages with unbroken pots and grinding stones. Unfortunately, I was never able to explore any of it with him. Your channel proves to me that these places exist. As another Southern Utahn, I want to say great job, keep up the great vids and I'm looking forward to your next one!
I would love to find unbroken pots one day! Thank you for your kind words!
I used to live in Utah and would go out in the desert (more up north near Eureka where that crazy lunatic threw those young people down the mineshaft.)
Lots of stories about lost treasure all over...especially lost gold mormon coins that were stolen and the thieves went into the desert next to be seen again.
My mom has told me stories of her family when growing up going around the area and finding all sorts of ruins and pottery. They called it "Tooli Hopping". My grandpa had a large collection of intact pottery that vanished when he died. Different times, for sure.
Jeff, your pleasing nature matches the beautiful nature you explore. Thank you for the heart you put into these videos.
Thank you!! This is so much fun for me!
Hi there Jeff. I am native and live among these ruins. Our ancestors passed down to us. Anaizie broke their pottery and they did not carry with them. Later they would make more pottery where they live. It was said from Pablo people we don't want dog's eating from our dish. Thats why pottery was broken before they left
Thank you for sharing that insight! I always wonder why there is so much broken pottery at these places!
We have a lot of similar ancient ruins built by the native "Romans" (haha) around where we live - it's fun seeing all the petroglyphs, pottery shards, etc. Some of them are right near busy roads, but fortunately not a lot of people know about them so they don't get destroyed. Thank you for keeping the locations secret. Looking forward to more videos, keep them coming!
I really wish Romans did send centurions to The Southwest! That would be some interesting history!!
The Pueblo remind me of Etruscans.
Congratulations on 100K. Thank you for taking this senior citizen to places she could never reach.
The amount of respect to each and every site and the every shard of pottery shows you deserve 100,000 followers.
I really appreciate that, thank you!!
I am amazed at all the places you visit. Being disabled now, you go places I can't. Thank you!
I have an amazing place I'm excited to share with you! I just got back today and am working on a few videos. I hope you will enjoy this one too!
You are truly blessed, as I'm sure you know! Speaking on behalf of all old geezers everywhere, who've always had more than a passing interest in things of an archeological nature, we appreciate these wonders you are cataloging for future generations. Through you narratives and camera work, I can see things that few ever see, and I'm appreciative of the technology (and gasoline) you've purchased to make these things possible. The best part is, you have a pleasing demeanor and are a natural at this. Keep up the good work and please be careful! You're in the ancient stomping ground of the Skinwalker! Glad you have a Sat phone.
Being an old geezer, I’ll join in this opinion. Being good gets you stuff.
Geezette here. Thank you for documenting your adventures and taking us with you!💖
Skinwalkers and chupacabras too! 😳
I'm usually a shy person, but putting myself out there has been a challenge and blessing in many ways to me. I've really had to stretch myself. I have really enjoyed sharing these places with you and others!
Excellent channel; please ignore the idiots who have miserable lives and must feel relevant by spreading negative energy. Continue doing what you do; you’re great!
That means a lot to me. Thank you!
It's hard to believe that the buildings of the Ancient Pueblo have been there for THOUSANDS OF YEARS, and some of the stuff we build now barely lasts over several HUNDRED!
Also, you are just so darn cute that you brighten my day every time I watch one of your great videos! I'm a 60-something, very happily married lady, so don't worry about me stalking you or anything 😉.
haha thank you so much!
Cheers!! It only took once and I was hooked. 99,999 others are too. You’re doing it right. Congrats!!
Thank you for tagging along with me!!
Thank you for concealing the precise locations, and for leaving them undisturbed. I appreciate your videos very much!
THANK YOU! Loved it. Did you know the Dineh (Navajo) used to dig holes all over the places where they might encounter "Anasazi", so they could jump into them and conceal themselves. The Anasazi's main economy was the slave trade. Chaco was built by slaves, and slaves cut and hauled the timbers. Each home/building at Chaco Canyon is built diff. I never noticed until it was pointed out by a Dineh Historian Wally Brown. He said the slaves built their own homes and in the style of their tribe, that's why they are different. The Dineh called Chaco "The House or place of crying" b/c wails and cries were always heard coming from the place. They were into human sacrifice. Worshipped the darkness, and mocked the gods. They became addicted to gambling, which was brought to them by a man from the south. Prob. an Aztec or Toltec. They even gambled their wives and children away. Then they came under mind control from the beings that come thru the portals. The spiral represents the portal, and you see the beings connected to this portal. They can be in human form, or chimera's. They ate each other. Book about it "Man Corn"
Those who could fled, the slaves revolted and fled. Some never seen again, others joined other tribes or joined the Dineh. (am I repeating myself lol. I've typed this elsewhere to someone) This info. comes to me from a 3rd generation medicine man and storyteller for the Dineh Navajo. A generation for them is 102 yrs. He says whatever you are told by the Parks Dept. about Chaco is not true. They will not allow the truth to be told. It's too woo woo for them. However, Dr. Don Mose Jr. the 3rd generation storyteller who gave this info. said their creation story mirrors Genesis as well. (it does, it starts off with 4 rivers that flow in opposite directions, but only two are in their oral history. Same as in the Bible. Tigris, Euphrates always talked about. Gishon and Pison sp? just mentioned once.
He is on FILM saying this stuff. Which, is indeed a once in a lifetime thing. After The Hopi were betrayed and a ceremony not to be seen by outsiders was filmed and shown to outsiders...no more white man and his camera. Even Dr. Mose said, as he erased the sand after he told the stories said they stay here. Nothing leaves the hogan. You memorize the stories. He was rather indifferent to the camera. He just sat down and started chanting out all this oral history about The Anasazi. They had to kill the lights, pre checks, everything b/c once Don started, he does not stop. So they just turned the camera on and rolled with it.
A really neat idea would be to speak with the local tribes' elders and ask them about some of these finds as far as what they know about them because I bet there is a great deal of knowledge they have that would be so interesting to learn and to share with us.
Absolutely LOVE your channel! Calming yet adventurous. I’ve always been fascinated with ancient dwellings especially Native American sites so a big THANK YOU for all that you do. Congratulations!
Thank you!! I'm happy to have you "along" on the adventure with me!
The ancient dwellings are remarkable. Love Mesa Verde!! ❤️
Well deserved! One of my favorite channels. Great hikes and discoveries with gorgeous and beautiful scenic views. And you’re so respectful of the sites.
Love! 💗
Thank you so much!!
One of my favorite channel on YT!
You deserve it!!! In my opinion you are on par with “Time Team”and “Indiana Jones”. You will likely inspire many people to care for our past in the correct way. You will also inspire others to just… go outside!! You are doing something really important here, and your success is the proof.
How have I never found your site til now? So happy. I'm sadly too old to go trekking to the really adventurous places, but my husband and I love taking trips from California to the desert southwest and visiting petroglyph sites as well as ancient dwellings of early indigenes. That region holds a fascination for me; don't know why, but it's an awesome experience. A favorite memory is a trip that included a drive through Sunset Crater, where we walked up to and around dozens of ruins, finding pottery shards, handprints in the adobe mud holding stones together in the ruins on the walls of Walnut Canyon. I would love to be young now, with a tool like Google Earth to help us explore. I'll explore vicariously through you, now I've found you. Thank you so much for sharing, yet taking care with protecting these very special sites. I do hope you find an archeologist with whom you can share the locations so perhaps at some point they can be studied more. Who knows what new facts might be learned!
I'm so glad to have you part on my adventures!!
The structure that is about 12 minutes in is a geologic structure. Myron Cook in his video "Investigate Mysterious Features with a Geologist" explains how it is formed. I just came across your videos and I am really enjoying them. I am so happy to see how respectful you are of the sites and I appreciate that you do not reveal where they are. As a rockhound I have seen first hand the destruction of an area when it becomes public. Looking forward to new adventures through your videos. I wish you continued success and safe travels!
For the amount of research you put into these videos and the time it takes to do so, specially with your family? Great videography! Glad your video hit my algorithm! Thank you!
I'm so glad too!! Thank you algo!!
The area you've explored with the footage you've never showed before, with the 3 figured petroglyphs, I got to visit that same sight about 15 years ago, and it started my fascination of ancient sites and such! So fun to see someone else sharing that same place and seeing what I saw so long ago!
My draw to subscribe was the detail you show of your finds and your even greater respect for those finds. Thank You for sharing.
Binge watching! Just fascinating to this 75 year old still young at heart and vicariously living your fantastic adventures with you.
Thank you for your work. As an indigenous descendant of the southwest who doesn’t live there I appreciate being able to see the places my ancestors built and that someone who isn’t of the lineage who built them appreciates them just as much as I do. I love you man you’re the best. Please keep doing what you do. It makes me so proud of who I am and anyone who dogs you is racist or is jealous of the legacy some people have on this continent. Thank you 🙏
Jeff, I'm glad to have found your channel, and become one of the 100K subscribers! I'm sure I'm not alone in telling you that you have a personality and presentation style that makes me feel like I'm enjoying your company in the videos, not just enjoying the places you take us. Too many youtube channels are full of conceit. You come across as genuine, and that's refreshing!
Your videos are particularly compelling to me because I spend time on Google Earth as well, while I'm planning any hike. So you're playing a familiar game, and you're clearly having fun with it too! A couple of your videos have provided enough clues to inspire me to pull up Google Earth and go hunting for the site you visited. So far I've only found one, and only because I was familiar with Cedar Mesa/Bears Ears. It's one of my favorite playgrounds!
The history is fascinating, whether it's "ancient" or not. If we were in Europe or Asia or Africa and we found stone age sites, there would be no question that the sites are "ancient." But in the Americas, stone age culture lasted right up until Cortez arrived, and much longer than that in areas the Spanish never settled. So stone age sites in the Americas are much younger than they might be in other parts of the world, but no less fascinating.
It's funny that you mentioned the age of the Egyptian pyramids as a comparison to the Ancestral Puebloans. The two have something in common that keeps my attention: the egyptian hieroglyphs were a puzzle to historians for centuries: a written language, much like the petroglyphs and pictographs on Utah, but one that we haven't yet deciphered. Maybe someday we'll find an American "Rosetta Stone" to help us clear up their meaning!
I really appreciate your comment!! I have heard that some of the meanings to some petroglyphs are still known today by some Native American groups, but that they are sacred and they do not want to share them. I can't remember if I heard this from a video somewhere or a lecture I took part in at the University of Utah, but it just goes to show that petroglyphs (and ruins) are special places
You deserve every one of those 100K followers, your content is always good and always enjoyable. Next stop, 250K!
That means so much to me! I hope one day to get there!
Really enjoy the posts of your adventures. Thank you VERY MUCH for your constant reminders to be respectful of the places, and the things (think pottery shards), that you find. Keep up the great work, wish I could be there exploring with you!
I love to watch your adventures. I'm too old to do it so you're doing it for me...thanks.
New subscriber here.
Love your channel. I grew up on the Navajo Reservation near Canyon De Chelly. So I grew up exploring the canyon and ruins. It has always fascinated me.
Love how you respect everything you see and also not taking bits of pottery. (Bad luck to that that).
Keep up the amazing work.
Thank you so much. I'm jealous you have gotten to explore Canyon De Chelly. It's on my list. I know it's an amazing place and can't wait to visit. Thank you for your comment
I like that you are exploring without being intrusive or digging. Your taking a peak and not making out you know what you’re looking at so it feels like we explore with you. Thanks
I am now too "ancient" at 85 to do what you already do so well, but you have inspired me to join the Archaeological Conservancy as a volunteer, so may be I can get back out in the field some way.
You deserve the 100K followers (and more). You obviously put a great deal of effort into your research and excursions. I look forward to your future videos!
Thank you so much!
I'm glad you're getting so much subs! You deserve it for all the hard work you do to create quality content. You have one of the best channels on TH-cam. I hope you get over 1 million subs before it's said and done.
You are an awesome trekker and I am definitely hooked on your videos! Stay safe and keep exploring. We will keep watching! And thank you for being so respectful and fun!
As a fellow explorer at heart, I Love your videos! Finding unique things on Google Maps and then Going Out to Find them! Sooo Cool! And it’s refreshing to see your respect for these awesome ancient sites! Keep up the good work! Congrats on reaching 100K!!
Thank you thank you!! I am having a lot of fun doing this! The drives are not so much fun though haha
Good morning Mr. Trek, I love how u respect each & everything. I love your work & respect the way U respect. Thank you Trek for everything. From a happy subscriber 🌞
Thank you tons! Means a lot to me!!
Loving your explorations even more with the kids! Wish I had had parents like you! The excitement is contagious 😄😎😍
Very interesting many congratulations on 100k subscribers well deserved 👍👌
It is actually because of YOU that this was made possible. Well done. I admire you. Slow the edits down a bit for us oldies eh? haha We get to live vicariously through you and you are an absolute delight. Thank you for sharing this world with us.
Wow, thank you! I’ll keep that in mind to slow things down a bit in future videos :-)
Thank you for always giving us fantastic content. It's a real pleasure to watch it.
I am amazed at your sure footing on the sides of cliffs!!
Thankfully for those of us who hike there, the sandstones of southern Utah and the four corners provide fantastic traction, and they help make all of us more sure-footed, so long as the rocks are not loose.
There's a recreation area near Moab Utah that's called "Slickrock." While the name makes it sound dangerous, its a bit of an inside joke: the rock surfaces at Slickrock are some of the grippiest anywhere. making it possible to hike or to ride bikes and motorcycles on steep inclines without losing grip. It's a weird feeling at first, moving across a slope that makes you think you might slide down, yet your boots and tires grip like the slope was almost flat.
Congrats on 100k subs. ❤❤❤❤
Look up ancient! You can call these ancient ruins. Love your videos. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I am also ancient.
I think this is so cool and thank you for showing us this im so glad you are doing all the foot work keep up the great work.
I did a google search for one of the carved names that appeared in the video. John Harvey Averett was born on 8 March 1854, in Salt Lake City. He died on 5 May 1917, in Logandale, Nevada at the age of 63, and was buried in Pioneer Hill Cemetery, Overton, Nevada. I even found pictures of him. Fun!
Another search for Adolph Axelson turns up a possible candidate from Two Harbours, Minnesota, born in 1851 and died 1925.
A candidate for the Jens Peter Hansen carving was a person by that name born in Utah to Danish immigrant parents. He lived from 1866-1934.
The name Peter O. Madsen may have been Ole Madsen 1818-1881. He was born in Denmark but died in Manti, Utah.
@@rossmacintosh5652
I wonder if he fought in the Civil War?
Love your channel!!! Thank you for the respect you show for the Earth and ancient historical places you visit. I am half Lakota and just love seeing all hour finds! ❤
Congratulations on 100K. Well done and deserved. I enjoy your hikes and definitely appreciate your efforts to conceal exact locations.
Cograts on 100k. I have been really enjoying your adventures. I
I appreciate your dedication, the self reflection and the historical respect you show concerning your treks. I often want to know more about the builders of these ruins. Thanks!
i'm so glad to have found your channel and pleasantly surprised by how quickly its grown in subscribers. i grew up in a small town in arizona and spent my childhood exploring the desert. every video takes me back to that feeling of wonder. so cool. 🙂
Kia Ora Jeff, and congratulations on reaching 100,000. I'm so glad that on the first day I saw the youtube shorts appear, yours was the first one I clicked on and you got a new subscriber. I think you were around 23 or 43 thousand at that point. Sorry I can't recall. Regardless, I'm so appreciative of your efforts and your long suffering Annie who always seems okay ♫♪ ♪♫
PS: The marker at 15:29 is not a headstone but a memorial for a county worker that was shot by a psychiatrically ill itinerant who was camping out in the desert. It was an absolutely senseless killing. There's plenty of info on line if you or anyone is interested.
Keep it up. Good work
Don’t think I told you before but I watch your videos more than once because I can’t find any new videos from you. I would rather watch yours than other peoples videos because you seem like you’re a real person, not a phony. Thanks for being you Jeff. Please keep it up.♥️
You do a good job of taking us places that some of us cannot travel to, so thank you for your efforts and your own interest in archeology, and for keeping the locations protected.
Keep up the good work and thank you for sharing your videos with us! ❤
Best video so far! Thank you for sharing your adventures.
I'm not surprised your channel has 100K subs. It has a natural appeal to it and It's well done and well thought out. You're doing a good job, keep up the good work.
I love your videos. I also enjoy the wacky, fringe comments. From the sublime to the ridiculous!
Thank you so much!
absolutely amazing discoveries! thank you so very much for sharing!
just subscribed, congrats on your massive growth on here!!!!
I enjoy your channel please keep it up, congratulations 🎉
I love those old steps. It must have taken so much work to carve them out. The person who made them must have felt pride & a sense of acheivement & left a lasting creative work of practical use. Such works, when you think of the hands & backs & bodies that made them, have a real beauty of their own.
Keep Trekking, been exploring for over forty years. When I can’t get out your videos incite me to roam. There is always something undiscovered waiting. Best fun ever!
LOVE your videos! Keep it up and stay safe.
Thank you very much ti taking us along on your adventures. They are so neat and informative. 👍😍👋😎.
Thank you for documenting your adventures. I really enjoy your show. I dig your bike and the fact that you can find all of those petroglyphs and ruins out in the wild. You have brought these to our attention which is part of your American history. Looking forward to more . Bruce. Johannesburg South Africa
I love what you do. I used to be able to do things like that myself but my health doesn't permit me to any more. That's why I love and appreciate what you do very much. You makes me feel like I'm right there with you. Thank you very much. I hope you keep traveling and making great videos.
Kathy
What I love about exploring and finding places like this is that you are standing in the exact same spot those people were standing in when they carved those petroglyphs or built those ruins. That is so exciting to me.
So the "anthromorphs" you showed at 12:37, those are depictions of Katsina, think of them like incredibly significant and powerful spirits. Theyre still celebrated by modern Puebloan people, as they were in ancient times. Those are some of the most detailed Katsina petroglyphs ive seen in the middle of nowhere- im not done with the video so i don't know yet if theres more ruins around them, but you should definitely look into them- based on the ones you see depicted, itll tell you a lot about the mindset and lives of the people who inhabited the region- some are associated with certain family clans, others bring water, good crops, successful battles- even a passing knowledge can help answer questions about a region/the people who lived there. I cant go too much into it, they arent my stories to tell, but that find is spectacular, and says so much about the people who were there!
I love your channel. I was surprised to see that I'm one of 100,000 that feel the same way.👍
Congrats on 100k! Found your channel when most people did, around 5 months ago, and been really enjoying learning from and watching your adventures!
I am very grateful that you and others have helped grow my channel to where it is today! Thank you
I salute you for the steps you take to preserve these ruins. They are truely amazing. Nothing like them in Ohio, but we have the earthwork and mounds from times past. So many have been destroyed. Some of the structures look like they could be possibly ceremonial. Be interesting to hear what the archeologist say about them. Keep the videos coming I’ll never get a chance to see them but your taking some hike I know my old body couldn’t do. Stay safe!
I'd just like to say thank you for taking us all along on your adventures. Currently & temporarily, I am bed ridden, so I appreciate it all that much more. It's like a mini vacation for the brain...
In this video, it looks like some miners just happen to spot "a bein" in an abandoned native dwelling of sorts. Miners would look for certain quartz deposits & other signs, which often led them to silver, copper or precious stones. Naturally they would dump their unwanted materials, and probably utilized some of the old structures to their advantage for camp or shade. The two mixtures of two totally different cultures is why their are carefully stacked stone, & obvious dump heeps, seemingly right next to one another
Keep going, it is a delight following your exploits in the desert. Thank you.
I live in urban London (UK)- you're so lucky to have this scenery to wander in, and unexplored spots to find. It's lovely to see this part of the USA. Keep it up!
Congratulations on 100K!!!! You absolutely deserve it!
Wow thank you so much!!
Nice job editing it all together for us. Thanks. Your videos come across as very genuine. Appreciate it, from Ivins, UT.
My dad took us to every national park he could and hiked a lot.I didn’t appreciate it as a child but now, in my 60s I have time and want to get back into shape and go see things. Your videos are very nice and easy to watch and I’m hoping will get me up and exploring again. I like the information and history you share. Very useful. Thank you!
Congrats on 100k subscribers!!! You deserve it, one of the best channels on TH-cam!
wow that means the world to me!
@@TheTrekPlanner Wow thank you so much for responding! I absolutely mean it, your content is second to none! I have a huge interest in Southwestern archaeology and the research and exploring you do and videos you make are fascinating and make me want to further explore the incredible ancient history and ruins in that stunning part of the country. Thanks for the outstanding content, keep up the great work!
Congratz! It's well earned. Love your channel.
And thank YOU for giving us a window to a fascinating world. While Chaco Canyon and the Anasazi may be prime examples of native American settlement in the Southwest, your finds clearly demonstrate the extent of the Pueblo influence. Take care, be safe!
I can’t tell u how much I enjoy your content & don’t know what I’d do w out them & your kind respectful narration so natural & congenial. ❤ I’d be more lost w out them & vise versa enjoy getting lost in them trying to guess where u are.
And hey… it’s about time u married that girl omgawl! Patient woman! & adorable family.👍🌵🏜️🐿️😀
There are a few channels I subscribe to and since i've recently discovered yours, I can say, you've quickly have made my top 3. Technology, (ie. Google Earth, GPS, drones.), wasn't around when I was able to explore desert regions and I find it absolutely intriguing. Now, I sit and vicariously explore with adventurers like you, willing to share your travels, adventures and knowledge without sidetracking. Congrats on reaching that magic number, and good luck reaching the next one!
I am humbled that I am even on your list! I'm just a regular guy hiking, so your comment means so much to me. Thank you!!
Oh my gosh! That orange pottery is amazing. I love the desert and used to go hiking and camping often in Southern Utah. I've been fortunate enough to also hike to some ruins around Lake Powell. Now that I can't hike anymore I enjoy the journey you are taking us on. I dont care what anyone says, 700 years in our history is ancient!!! Keep up the great work. Its also fun to see you others. I get a little nervous thinking about you out there by yourself. I'm glad you take the precautions you do!
You are my adventure from my couch. I am 70 and never will get a chance to travel and see areas like this. Thanks so much!
Pay no attention to your detractors. They are few. You do an excellent job with your videos and I enjoy them very much. I respect the fact that you keep the sites somewhat secret and that you leave everything as you found it. Keep up the excellent work!
You have adventures. We watch. I like it.
Congratulations, your videos are fun and interesting. Thanks for sharing.
Congratulations 👏👏👏
It's obvious you have a passion for this and that you work hard to put out good content and you are being rewarded for that
I've spent most of my 59 years surrounded by the red sandstone featured here.
These places do exist. The fewer that know where something is, the fewer can despoil it.
The more of these I see, the more I admire the people that built them.
For a seaker of adventure out west, you fill in the gaps when I cannot be there. Very nice. I like your respect for the ancestors.
Spent lot of time in SW in70s, no Google earth. Our discoveries were made by dirt bike and sheer accident but always amazed. Thanks a lot for these videos. Love them, keep it up.please
Recognized meaning of ancient is 1000 years or older. But this is quit subjective. 750 yrs is close enough. Thanks for thanking us along on your treks.
The channel has unique and intersting content. ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
I love that you are showing artifacts that are Native American. We don’t know enough about their history. Not the correct history either. So it is so cool to see all these! And it is also sad to see them damaged and not cared for. Our history is important. I wish they were protected more.
Haven't commented before, but here I go. Been watching your videos for some time now and have really enjoyed them because I have also run across many old/ancient ruins in the four corners area and I'm always intrigued by them. I try to imagine myself living in that spot years ago and usually can't see how they did it. I think there must have been a lot more water in those areas than you see today. No matter the circumstances, I really admire what they had to do to survive. Keep up the good work. I'm looking forward to more.
Thank you for your comment! I do what you do, admire what they created and that we get to see it, or what's left of it.